User:TerryDieterle/sandbox

The Universe, A Temporal Perspective. (It's about time.)
We are all familiar with the concept of a universe consisting of three spacial dimensions and one temporal dimension. But consider looking at it from another perspective, a purely temporal perspective. Where space itself is a temporal manifestation. And not just space but also the qualities we associate with it, gravity, mass, energy, every aspect of the universe a single unified expression of time.

Space
The simplest visualization is of space itself. We commonly refer to space as units of miles, or kilometers, feet or leagues. But all these are based solely on arbitrary relationships, be it the length a horse could pull a plow before having to rest or the the size of the Earth itself. A more concise unit of length would be based on one of the most fundamental constants of the universe, the speed of light which is itself precise representation of the component of time. It translates to approximately 186,282 miles per second or 300,000 kilometers per second. And in American terms this very roughly equals 1 foot per nanosecond.

The prevailing logic would thus allow us to equivalently state the distance from the Earth to the Moon is 238,900 miles or 1.28 seconds. Or more locally the distance from your eyes to your computer display as 2 feet or 2 nanoseconds.

Velocity/Acceleration
The conversion of spacial dimensions to temporal dimensions also changes the definition of velocity and acceleration. Where they were once expressed as for example as ft/sec or ft/sec2 respectively. They would now be (approximately) nanoseconds/sec and nanoseconds/sec2. Simplifying velocity becomes a unitless numerical value. I.E. 60 miles/hour = 88 feet/sec = 88 nanoseconds/second = 88xE-9. Likewise acceleration such as the Earths gravitational constant of 32 feet/second2 = 32 nanoseconds/second2 = 32xE-9/second.

The change in units eludes to the true nature of a "temporal" distance. A distance in space is actually a measurement in time. More precisely a displacement from any point in space is equivalent to a temporal displacement into the past. For example, the sun is a distance of approximately 8.3 minutes, and exists for all real purposes 8.3 minutes in the past. Every physical property we observe from the sun, light, gravity, etc. is actually from 8.3 minutes ago. If the sun were to somehow cease to exist, we would be totally oblivious to any indication whatsoever until 8.3 minutes after it occurred.

The further away from Earth we look we see further into the past. The age of the universe is approximately 13.8 billion years. As we look deeper into space we look closer to the origin of the universe itself.

This in itself brings up an alternative view of the true nature of the universe. We commonly accept that the universe began in the "Big-Bang", where from a sub-atomic space everything was created, expanded and evolved into what we observe today. However, another explanation is that the universe was created and is actually expanding inwardly. Time and the universe is evolving within itself. Were it possible to observe the universe from the outside, nothing would appear to have changed.

Mass/Gravity
Mass and gravity are different manifestations of the same temporal component. All elementary particles are composed of "temporal loops". These loops like the universe itself are contained within themselves. In other words time does not exist outside the loop. The electron is a perfect example, having an infinite lifetime, time within the electron does not exist. It is as it always has been and as it will ever be. The entire existence of the universe from beginning to end is nothing inside the electron.